88 100% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. 94.6 PROOF. DISTILLED. BOTTLED & SHIPPED FROM LONDON FOR J. M. McCUNN & CO., INC., N. Y. MARCH I.'} 9 I 9 b 5 THE UNCOMPROMISING GIN . Tanqueray's indomitable flavour cannot be smothered...by vermouth, by tonic, by juice. Heroic in defense of its English character, and of its British antique green bottle. , embracing a New Radicalism. New Radicals don't ordinarily use the term, but they constantly stress that they have a new approach to radical politics-and it was this approach that dominated the Steering Committee of the Free Speech Movement. Most F.S.M. leaders make no attempt to disguise their deep aliena- tion from American society, but they regard allegiance to any specific alterna- tive as utopian, divisive, immobilizing, and-perhaps most significant-not their "style." The word "style" is widely used among the New Radicals- most of whom are indeed admirers of Fidel Castro, often because of his style-and in giving reasons for their avoidance of the old radical organiza- tions they are as likely to cite distaste for the style of their jargon and theo- retical debate as disgust with the futility of what Savio has called "spending hours trying to invent a motto that makes you different from other sects." \Yhile part of this preference for dis- sociation is undoubtedly a desire to avoid tarnished labels, the New Radicals con- sciously avoid in their own activities the automatic condemnatio'n of Commu- nists-"pathological anti-Stalinism," in their phrase-that has come to char- acterize the non-Communist left in the United States during the Cold War, and they count it as one of the accom- plishments of the F.S.M. that the DuBois Club could be represented on the Steering Committee without any more objection than was made. In place of ideology, the New Rad- icals tend to rely on action. "The word ,. . 1 , . d 1 " J k W . eXlstenna IS use a or, ac em- berg told me. \Veinberg, who is twen- ty-four, is a full-time unpaid activist; he wears a droopy mustache and work clothes, and in the pictures taken during his imprisonment in The Police Car he somehow managed to resemble both Sacco and Vanzetti. "You could call it an affirmation of self," he went on. "J ust because we can't see what the end might be doesn't mean we're going to sit here. It's a matter of screaming. \Ve have to justify everything in terms of the act itself. The trouble with being ideologically oriented is that it's im- mobilizing; you have to justify all kinds of things in terms of the ideology. \Ve're really problem-oriented. Utopia is too far away to worry about. F.S.M. had a limited goal, but look what hap- pened. Look at the effect it could have on educational policy and student ac- tivism across the country. Who could have planned that?" Although Savio is considered the most moralistic of the New Radicals, all of them explain their conclusion that or.", ,"'" if -- " . "- , ,r /-:", ,_\...... Jr' _" - DRTED * .- t iAl DIY I i1 1 . id'; TANQUERAV&C9I.1!. , F t , ' ; : .? pdØ' . 1 """,."" Qgg T[J OR, :a:OU'"SE: doatÆe þlht After all, what's fresher than a crisp check suit of rayon/acetate/flax? And what's fresher than a blouse of dacron and cotton pertly lied at the throat? Pebble Beige and White or Cloud Blue and White checks with coordinated solid blouse. $35.00 complete! Not shown: bias cut check A,line skirt, about $10. Coordinated Antron shell, about $6. All in sizes 5-15. At the Peck & Peck store nearest you. or for the fine store or college shop in your city. write to Junior House, Inc.. 1407 Broadway. New York 10018. ) t . . . " 'f' "r 11 AJ" f '